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Washington Football Team History


Washington Huskies
University of Washington
 Seattle, WA
Founded: 1861
Stadium: Hushy Stadium
Capacity: 72,500
Colors: Purple & Gold
Coach: Enoch Bagshaw
Conference: Pacific Coast-

Team Home Summary  Coaches Games by Year Opponents Rankings Bowls Conference


Select Year:    
1889  <-- 1928 <- 1929 -> 1930 --> 2024

1929 Season Highlights
 Enoch Bagshaw enters his 9th season as Head Coach at Washington.
 
1929 Season
 Date   Opponent  Score   
 Sat., Sep. 28  vs. Whitman  47   0   W       
 Sat., Oct. 5  vs. Montana  6   6   T       
 Sat., Oct. 12  vs. Southern California  0   48   L       
 Sat., Oct. 19  @ Washington State  13   20   L       
 Sat., Oct. 26  vs. Oregon  0   14   L       
 Sat., Nov. 2  @ Puget Sound  73   0   W       
 Sat., Nov. 9  vs. Stanford  0   6   L       
 Sat., Nov. 16  @ California  0   7   L       
 Sat., Nov. 23  @ Chicago  6   26   L       
 
1929 Season Totals
  Record2-6 -1
  Points Scored145
  Scoring Average16.1
  Points Allowed127
  Defense Average14.1
  Opponents Record43-10
  Conference Record0-5
  Home Record1-3 -1
  Away Record1-3
1929 NCAA Final Rankings
 Rank   Record   Source 
  was not ranked.
  
1929 Pacific Coast- Standings
  Season   Bowls   Conference 
 Team  W/L/T  PF  PA    W/L/T  PF  PA   Coach 
Southern California 10-249269Won  47-145-118629  Howard H. Jones
Stanford 9-228853 5-115727  Glenn Scobey Pop Warner
California 7-1-115578 3-14228  Clarence M. Price
Oregon 7-320991 3-16433  John J. McEwan
Washington State 10-230174 2-23654  Orin E. Babe Hollingbery
Oregon State 5-4182106 0-41486  Paul J. Schissler
UCLA 4-4121190 0-30160  William H. Bill Spaulding
Washington 2-6-1145127 0-51395  Enoch Bagshaw

1929 All American Awards
 Player   Position   Class   Ht.   Wt.   Award   Team   Source 
 Coming Someday 

1929 All Pacific Coast Conference Players
 Player   Position   Class   Ht.   Wt.   Team   Source 
 Coming Someday 


Some records may be incomplete.


Great Moments in College Football History

In 1905, 18 men were killed in college football games, and 159 were permanently injured.